I'd include tips on how to find a venue for the meetups.
– Dylan YoungJan 15 '18 at 16:02

I think that would be a host/organizer thing to find some venue in near by area which at least have basic facilities like seat arrangements, wi-fi, projectors etc. Facilities like Live streaming, recording the session are good to have. But that comes with questions like who will be sponsoring these logistics. :-)
– Amitabh VyasJan 15 '18 at 16:43

3 Answers
3

Register on meetup.com and post to Slack (https://bit.ly/SitecoreSlackSignup); contact your local Sitecore office to help with initial promotion to customers and agencies nearby

Don’t count on sponsorship but accept it when/if it comes; there’s no “I” In community (except the one at the end, but we don’t talk about him, since the thing that time). Find a cheap, reliabably available location that can hold 50 but doesn’t feel empty at 15. Services offices and co-working spaces often have space like this and love the free promotion. Split sponsorship into food/bevs/room and be happy for all 3! Booze is expensive, pizza is not - devs love pizza!! Count on $500-1000 per event at least.

Just be conscious that it isn’t free and takes a lot of time to keep finding sponsors and speakers, so be the guy that will fill in when there’s a gap. Helps if you own an agency that can sponsor 5-7 a year!

Thanks much for the document Mahendra, its very explanatory. Tamas: Extracting the excellent content from the document posted the below community wiki. Thanks for the suggestion.
– Amitabh VyasJan 16 '18 at 16:27

Experienced host/organizers of various Sitecore User Groups sharing their experiences and guidelines which can help people who are interested in starting a new Sitecore User Group.

Michael Ian Reynolds:

Create group on meetup.com.

Find a location sponsor for the meetup session (this needs to be done for every meetup session).
a. Set up a meeting to view the space.
i. Determine if the space is large enough to hold up to 30+ people (of course this may vary by region).
b. Enquire about parking.
c. Ask whether the venue's doors lock after business hours (I was once locked out of a user group after stepping out for a cigarette).
d. Ensure a projector/screen or a large television are available with the capability of hooking up to a laptop for presentations.
e. Ask if microphones are available (if not, you might have to purchase these).

Find food and beverages (soft drinks and beer) sponsor(s) (this needs to be done for every meetup session).
a. Could have one sponsor for both, or individual sponsors for each.

Find speaker(s) for the meetup session (this needs to be done for every meetup session).

Decide on whether the meetup should be streamed via a Google Hangout (this needs to be determined for each meetup session, and is decided on a case-to-case basis).
a. Would need a video camera for this.

Continuously promote sessions on LinkedIn, Twitter, Facebook, the Sitecore Community Slack and Google Plus (not sure if anyone even uses this anymore but it wouldn't hurt), reddit, etc.
a. It's best to start doing this at least 2 weeks before the session but ideally 1 month before.
You should also think about how often a meetup should be held that will vary by location/number of Sitecore devs/people in the area
You could start off meeting every three months but increase it to monthly if the demand increases or have available speakers
It’s also a good idea to reach out to your local regional Sitecore office to see how they can help out.

Robbert Hock

We started in 2012 talking with Sitecore NL, that we wanted to start one, to see if they wanted to be involved or not, and show them our plans. Marc and I then selected 3 other persons who could help us with organizing meetings. 3 Devs and 2 marketers. We then agreed upon that each role would be responsible for a role track (dev and marketing track), we aimed for having both dev tracks and marketing/business tracks at one night.

We saw however, that dev's are used by nature to visit UG's, and marketers do not (they only go to those fancy marketing events ;-)). we contacted Sitecore partners if they were willing to host an evening and take care of the catering and facilitating the location. The support was overwhelming. We're currently already full for 2017. We have meetings every 6 weeks, where we plan around SUGCON Europe and Symposium.

Sitecore NL said that they would support in speakers sometimes, but that it should be a community driven UG, which it totally is. We use Eventbrite as a system ( @sitecorejunkie so it shouldn't be just MEETUP), we created our own website, we use Trello for our task board and use Slack (SUGNL slack channel) to communicate with the speakers and partners.
Checkout our upcoming agenda: http://www.sugnl.net/agenda.aspx

Dean Thrasher

Remember to add your group to the Sitecore User Group index maintained by Hedgehog Software: http://www.sitecoreug.org/
Know your audience! Events should be for the benefit of the community. Remember that attendees of these sessions will come from a variety of backgrounds: Some are developers, some are content authors and editors, some have a business or marketing focus.

You should try to find topics that will engage all of these members of the community. Also remember that participants will have different levels of experience with Sitecore. Some will have years' worth of knowledge, others may be hearing about Sitecore or CMS platforms for the first time.

Some may have been involved with dozens of Sitecore implementations, others might only know one particular implementation. Including these different viewpoints and perspectives will make your Sitecore User Group more engaging and will prompt some interesting discussions.

We decided to create groups on: Meetup.com (meetup.com/Sitecore-Poland-Meetup/), Facebook (https://www.facebook.com/groups/SitecorePL), Twitter (https://twitter.com/SitecorePL). These are our main channels. Every time when we organize meeting we create new event on Meetup and Facebook and then try to inform other people about that fact additionally on Twitter. On each channel we write about incoming event but also we add information about other available channels. It usually looks like following message:

In our opinion it is important to share traffic between all available channels.

In Poland it’s not easy to find sponsors but I would suggest to ask your boss to sponsor the event - if will not agree on that just ask all companies from your country which work with Sitecore. Do not forget about Sitecore representants they very often can help with some gifts or just with find the right person to contact.
It is good to think about levels of sponsorship - because many companies asking for that.

Speakers

First of all, ask your friends - if they are not interested, ask other companies - if they are not interested, ask for volunteers on your channels - if no one came to you, try to ask MVPs on Twitter/Slack and prepare some money for covering the travel costs

Attendees

We try to care for our attendees as much as it is possible. So we:

Try to organize events on evenings

Prepare some food (pizza) and some drinks, because they usually join to meeting after the work

Give them some ID’s to let them easier start talk with other attendees